Ave’eva I Libretto/Script AVE’EVA (Alternative title AWATEA = dawn) Music and Lyrics by Lysanne Sizoo A story of love, loss and reconciliation 1 Ave’eva I Libretto/Script CAST Ave’eva: Wife of Alman. A young woman at the start of her adult life. Successful, bit of a Sunday child, expects the best, and has a (spiritual) sense of entitlement. Bit of a mystic and magical thinker. Very much in love with Alman who defines her in a traditional role as wife and mother. Goes into a deep crisis when her first pregnancy ends in a miscarriage. Her inability to deal with ‘failure’ leads to a search for meaning fed by anger at her God for not protecting her, anger at Alman for not understanding her, and mostly anger at herself for being unable to cope. Alman: Alman marries Ave’eva because he truly loves her. But at the start of their lives his belief in their love is naïve and romantic. When they lose their baby he is unable to meet Ave’eva in the depth of her pain. Instead he wants to ‘fix it’ and make it better. However, in the end it is the depth of his capacity for love, even in the face of rejection, that shows his greatness and builds a bridge to reconciliation. A realist and agnostic. Fate: The personification of the causality to whom we attribute responsibility for the things that happen in life. In this piece she is also a teacher: ‘Amor Fati’ describes an attitude that says that whatever happens to us, be it great joy or great suffering, is a fact of life, and something to be accepted and even learned from. She is cruel in her teaching, but gentle in her comfort. Spirit: “Some call me Father, Spirit, Son, some call me moon and stars and sun, but I am Evermore.” In his ‘own’ words he is ‘whatever you need him to be’. Let that be true for you. Elders: Represent all that is parental, both good or bad, and the influence of conditioning and socialising. Forest Cr: Ave’eva and Alman’s forest is a metaphor for our inner lives. The forest creatures represent emotions, drives, and all other sensory perceived aspects of our psyche. Barman: Stereotype male expression of the ‘women’ conundrum. 2 Ave’eva I Libretto/Script ACT 1 Marriage and loss Scene 1: A wedding AUDIO: Dawn chorus/birdsong as curtain rises. Then audio from screen. SCREEN: A video screen (mounted mid stage, high) shows the sun rising, then edited highlights from a wedding. Preparations, excitement, the ceremony, speeches, snippets of audio from the screen, strains of the wedding march, church bells, giggles, etc. Ends as action begins on stage and shows stage. STAGE: Starts dark, then lighting subtly follows morning, afternoon, evening in synch with screen. Set as a forest clearing, a small cottage to the side with a window to stage, bench in front. A long table is set in the clearing for a wedding party. Lanterns in the trees add an extra glow as night falls. First to arrive at the party are a Bagpiper and Accordionist. They set up, and start playing. Wedding guests arrive for the evening’s entertainment. AUDIO: Bagpipe and Accordion, folk music as guests arrive, then intro to Wedding Song. Gradually full orchestra joins in. STAGE: The bride and groom arrive last. Loud applause, the music swells. Toasting with champagne. AVE’EVA and ALMAN, begin their wedding dance. To the side of the wedding party stands FATE. Wedding Song AVE’EVA / ALMAN / FATE / WEDDING GUESTS Ave’eva: I am a bride and I want to be dancing I am a bride and I want to be glad. To sing and to dance, play games with the children all of the children that one day I’ll have. Want to sing a great song of gladness and blessings want to sing and be glad with the man I have wed. 3 Ave’eva I Libretto/Script Guests: Yes she is a bride and she will be dancing she is a bride and she wants to be glad. To sing and to dance, play games with the children all of the children that one day she’ll have. Ave’eva: Want to sing a great song of gladness and blessings want to sing and be glad with the man I have wed. Alman: She is my bride and I got me stunner she is my bride and oh I am glad. To protect and to keep her, to make lots of loving she is my baby, there’s good times ahead. Want to sing a great song of gladness and blessings want to roll in the hay with the woman I’ve wed. Guests: Yes she is his bride, he’s got him a stunner he can’t quite believe that she’s his to be had. He’ll protect and he’ll keep her and get lots of loving she is his baby, there’s good times ahead. Alman: Want to sing a great song of gladness and blessings want to roll in the hay with the woman I’ve wed. Guests: Singing and spinning, and spinning and dancing singing and spinning and oh they are glad Men: He’ll get his loving, Women: and she’ll have her children, STAGE: FATE sings her one line only to the audience. Fate: IF having children is what she will have. Al. & Av.: Want to sing a great song of gladness and blessings want to roll in the hay//sing and be glad with the woman/man I’ve wed. STAGE: While singing AVE’EVA AND ALMAN run towards the cottage. The guests follow to the door. Guests: Singing and spinning Alman: I got me a stunner Guests: Singing and spinning Ave’eva: All the children I’ll have 4 Ave’eva I Libretto/Script Guests: Singing and spinning, madder and madder singing and spinning STAGE: ALMAN pulls AVE’EVA inside. Alman: We’re off to bed! AUDIO: Orchestra dwindles. Just bagpipe and accordion. The tune now soft and almost a lament. SCREEN (webcam): AVE’EVA and ALMAN are making out passionately. The screen evokes a sense of voyeurism, augmented by FATE’s manner of giving the audience ‘insight’ into what’s happening. STAGE: The rowdy guests cheer for a while, slow dance, then kiss and leave. FATE is left alone in the clearing. Fate: Let them sing their great song of gladness and blessings. Let them gather their strength for the storm that’s ahead. AUDIO: Thunderclap, then silence. STAGE: FATE and Bagpiper leave. Dark SCREEN (webcam): AVE’EVA and ALMAN gradually fall asleep. Gentle snoring. Then dawn light dancing on AVE’EVA’s sleeping face, which is turned to the camera. Then the light turn dark and there are flashes of lightening. Screen darkens. AUDIO/SCREEN: Snoring, birdsong, rumbling thunder in the distance, the sound of rain. AUDIO/STAGE: Intro Raindrops STAGE: ELDERS (2 male, 2 female) and FATE outside the cottage. Raindrops FATE / ELDERS Fate: And so the fairy tale begins built on hopes and built on dreams Elders: we watch them and we wish them well but when life happens who can tell 5 Ave’eva I Libretto/Script who will win and who will lose the strongest are the ones who choose to find some learning in the pain To fall and then to rise again. Fate: So let the rain fall into their lives. It’s only through raindrops that rainbows come alive. Let the rain fall into their lives. Elders (f): What would she do if she knew her tomorrow? If she knew what was lying ahead? Would she find that the pattern of raindrops in her life Are part of a greater plan, being in this life and not be sad? Fate: So let the rain fall into their lives. It’s only through raindrops that rainbows come alive. Let the rain fall into their lives Elders (m): What will he do once he aches and he suffers Helpless, abandoned and sad? Will he try to avoid, the pain and the sorrow. Take up his sword, and draw blood for tomorrow. Be mad or bad? ALL: So let the rain fall into their lives. It’s only through raindrops that rainbows come alive. Let the rain fall into their lives. Fate: This fairy tale began at dusk And pretty soon will turn to dust. They’ll see me as their greatest foe but I will teach them they will know that they may win or they may lose, the strongest are the ones who choose, to find some learning in the pain, to fall and then to rise again Is there a place for me in their lives? It’s only through raindrops that rainbows come alive, A shower, a storm, oh it cuts like a knife but I will be steadfast and help them survive. Elders: Now let the rain fall into their lives Now let the rain fall into their lives. AUDIO: Thunderclap. Torrential rain, smaller thunderclaps dying away, wind howling, then calm as storm dies away. 6 Ave’eva I Libretto/Script STAGE: AVE’EVA runs out of the cottage onto the stage, just missing FATE and the ELDERS who leave taking the storm weather with them. Sun comes out as AVE’EVA peers around the clearing. ALMAN follows, groggy and hung over. ALMAN: Good morning my lovely. Up already? No time for a snuggle? AVE’EVA: (anxiously) Did you hear that? ALMAN: Hear what? (tries to pull her back into the cottage) AVE’EVA: A haunting sound, like the wind crying through the trees.
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